Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Air France: Plane debris found

Borloo called the A330 "one of the most reliable planes in the world" and said lightning alone, even from a fierce tropical storm, probably couldn't have brought down the plane.

"There really had to be a succession of extraordinary events to be able to explain this situation," Borloo said on RTL radio Tuesday.

SHOOT: Undoubtedly adverse weather conditions played a role. For cabin pressure to have failed, suggests to me that the craft was torn apart by opposing winds.

This is what it looks like when a major aircraft lands on the sea [ACTUAL FOOTAGE]
clipped from news.yahoo.com
Relatives of passengers of the Air France flight 447 are pictured through a

BRASILIA, Brazil – Brazilian military pilots spotted an airplane seat, a life jacket, metallic debris and signs of fuel in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean on Tuesday as they hunted for a missing Air France passenger jet that carried 228 people. They found no signs of life.

The pilots spotted two areas of floating debris about 60 kilometers (35 miles) apart, about 410 miles (650 kilometers) beyond the Brazilian island of Fernando de Noronha, roughly along Flight 447's path from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, said Air Force spokesman Jorge Amaral.

"The locations where the objects were found are toward the right of the point where the last signal of the plane was emitted," Amaral said. "That suggests that it might have tried to make a turn, maybe to return to Fernando de Noronha, but that is just a hypothesis."

The discovery came more than 24 hours after the jet went missing, with all feared dead.

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